Sweat Rates Flashcards

1
Q

What are some myths about fluids and hydration in athletes?

A
  • the body can adapt to dehydration (lack of body water)
  • Thirst is a good indicator of fluid requirements in athletes
  • Water-based athletes (e.g. swimmers, divers) don’t need to worry about staying adequately hydrated
  • You can “cure” dehydration during ecercise and perform at your best
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2
Q

What is the approximate sweat rate of most people?

A
  • ~1-2 L/hr
  • Variation and factors can influence sweat rate
  • Due to large variation some risks associated with giving broad recommendations because some athletes need tailored advice
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3
Q

Why do we sweat?

A

Sweating cools the body!!

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4
Q

How does sweating rate vary by sport?

A
  • baseball, soccer, and basketball similar
  • Biking high
  • Football highest sweat rates
  • Highly dependent on intensity and equpment! Body size can also contribute to more energy expenditure/heat generation
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5
Q

What facrors can impact the variability of sweat rate?

A
  • exercise intensity - working harder means more heat
  • Body size
  • Environmental conditions
    → temperature
    →humidity/humidex - heat + humidity
    →solar load - angle of sun, depends on geography
    →wind - can mask heat a bit
  • Heat acclimatization
  • Fitness - sweat more if untrained
  • Clothing/equipment worn - dry fit vs wool
  • Body composition
  • Hydration status
  • Age (maturation) - children not effective at sweating
  • Genetics
  • Methodology - way you measure
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6
Q

Why is humidex so dangerous?

A
  • Humidex = heat + humidity so get more sweating than if it was just one or the other
  • Need lots of water, and cooling.
  • Agressive hydration may still not even be enough to prevent dehydration
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7
Q

What decreases and increases mass when it comes to hydration balance?

A
  • Mass loss: sweat, urine, respiration (fuel oxidation, water vapor)
  • Mass gain: drinking, eating
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8
Q

What is the theoretical formula for sweat loss calculations?

A

Sweat loss = [Pre-Ex Body Mass - (Post-Ex Body Mass - Fluid and food + Urine and respiration)]

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9
Q

What is the practical formula for sweat loss?

A

Sweat Loss = [Pre-Ex Body Mass - (Post-Ex Body Mass - Fluid and food + urine)]

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10
Q

Why is the theoretical formula and practical formula for sweat rate calculations different?

A

Respiratory losses = 0.2g/kcal of energy expended during exercise. Because of the relatively small contribution of respiratory losses to total body mass loss and because energy expenditure is difficult to measure, this part of the equation is usually dropped for acute bouts of exercise

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11
Q

What is the goal of sweat rate calculations?

A
  • calculating sweat losses allows the sport dietitian to develop individualized fluid replacement goals for each athlete
  • Sweat losses (mL/hr) = target for fluid replacement during sport (mL/hr). Fine tune the 1-2L for each individual athlete
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12
Q

What are the supplies needed when doing a sweat rate calculation (advanced approach)?

A
  • Digital platform body weight scale with precision of 0.10kg or better
  • Towels
  • Clock or stopwatch
  • Drink bottles
  • Small digital scale
  • Urine cup
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13
Q

What are the instructions for calculating sweat rate (advanced approach)?

A
  • Before exercise: ask athlete to use the restroom to void (weigh urine cup), weigh athlete wearing minimal clothing, weigh drink bottles and food (bars, ges, etc) if applicable
  • During exercise: collect urine loss in cup and weigh, if applicable
  • After exercise: ask athlete to towel dry, weigh athlete while wearing same minimal clothing, weigh drink bottles and food, if applicable
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14
Q

What is the way of calculating seat rate (simple approach)?

A
  • Weigh before and after
  • Calculate amount of fluids drunk and the time of the activity then can calculated the sweat rate
  • Sweat loss = deficit + fluid intake
  • Sweat rate = sweat loss/time
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15
Q

Kelly’s pre-exercise weight is 61.7kg, her post exercise weight is 60.3kg. She filled water bottle with 500mL (prefluids). Kelly had 200mL of water in her bottle at the end of her exercise session (post-fluids). She trained for 55 minutes. What is her sweat rate?

A
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16
Q

What is the urine coloration chart and where should athletes aim to be?

A
  • 1-3
  • Body concentrates waste products when dehydrated = more concentrated color
17
Q

Calculate the athlete’s sweat rate

A
18
Q

Calculate the athlete’s sweat rate?

A
19
Q

What is the simplest way to assess hydration status?

A
  • Acute body mass change can be used to calculate sweating rate and perturbations in hydration status when corrrected for urine losses, drink volume, and trapped sweat
  • Other non-sweat factors (fuel oxidation and respiratory water loss) can overestimate sweating rate but do not require correction for <3 hr exercise)
  • Therefore, using acute body mass changes to estimate hydration status is appropriate for most individual and team sports, since practices and games are typically <3 hrs
20
Q

How much is a pound decrease in water?

A
  • Body weight changes reflect hydration status
  • 1lb decrease (acutely) = 500m: (2 cup) fluid loss
21
Q

What simple recommendations would you have for an athlete?

A
  • Have athletes track their body weight so that they can assess hydration-related changes
  • Want body weight to remain consistent, DO NOT want major losses
22
Q

What is hydration status? How do you calculate it?

A
  • Hydration status = % change in nude body mass
  • Calculation: [(Change in body mass)/baseline body mass]x100
  • E.g. 2% hypohydration = 2% body mass deficit through fluid loss
23
Q

What are the supplies needed to change hydration status?

A
  • Digital platform body weight scale with precision of 0.10kg or better
  • Towels
24
Q

What are the instructions for changing hydration status?

A
  • before exercise: ask athlete to use restroom and void bladder and bowels, weigh athlete while they are wearing minimal clothing (e.g. compression shorts, sports bra)
  • After exercise: ask athlete to towel dry thoroughly, weigh athlete while wearing the same minimal clothing as before
25
Q

What is the problem with using body mass to determine hydration status?

A

It becomes less accurate with long events. For example, during ultra endurance events greater than or equal to 2% body mass loss can occur through non sweat sources

26
Q

Calculate the athlete’s % change in hydration status after the match

A
27
Q

What urine color should athletes have and why? What are the practical recommendations?

A
  • Urine color can be used as a reliable marker of hydration status
  • Athletes with a urine color of 5 on a urine color chart are 6 times more likely to be hypohydrated
  • A mean urine color of 3 provides a reasonable assurance the athlete is hydrated
  • Urine color can be monitored by the athlete or by the ATC
  • Post urine color charts in bathrooms

Urine charts don’t work if they are taking vitamin or mineral supplements (e.g. vitamin C, beets)

28
Q

How can athletes self-assess before exercise?

A
29
Q

When should you use planned drinking versus drinking to thirst?

A
  • Drink to thirst: short duration activities <60 to 90 minutes, cooler conditions, lower intensity. Plain cool water all you need
  • Planned drinking: longer duration activities >90 minutes particularly in the heat, high intensity, high sweat rates, when performance is a concern, when carbohydrates intake of 1g/min

Start planned schedule of drinking right from the start 90-125mL of fluid every 10-15 minutes

30
Q

What are the recommendations for keeping hydrated?

A
  • Begin exercise properly hydrated. All athletes need to meet the basic AI for water and add sport requirements on top!
  • Use a personalized fluid intake strategy based on sweat test results, exercise duration, and environmental conditions
  • Drink enough fluid to prevent >2% dehydration, especially in warm weather
  • Do not overconsume fluids during exercise - Hyponatremia
  • Consume sodium with fluids if exercise is >2hr in hot weather and/or if sweat electrolyte losses are very high (>3g)
31
Q

What is the ACSM Position Stand for fluids before exercise?

A
  • Pre-hydrating with beverages, if needed, should be initiated at least several hours before the exercise task to enable fluid absorption and allow urine output to return toward normal levels
  • ~5-7mL kg per body weight
  • Consuming beverages with sodium and/or salted snacks or small meals with beverages can help stimulate thirst and retain needed fluids
32
Q

What is the ASCM position stand for fluids after exercise?

A
  • Consume ~1.5 L of fluid for each kg of body weight lost.
  • Range = 1200-1500mL/kg ? until usual body weight is recovered and held
  • Consuming beverages and snacks with sodium will help expedite rapid and complete recovery by stimulating thirst and fluid retention
33
Q

What is the ACSM position stand for fluids during exercise?

A
  • If possible, individuals should develop customized fluid replacement programs that prevent excessive (<2% body weight) reductions from baseline body weight) dehydration
  • Predicted sweat rates range from ~0.4 to ~1.8L per hr
  • It is recommended that indiviuals should monitor body weight changes during training/competition sessions to estimate their sweat lost during a particular exercise task with respect to the weather conditions
  • CHO consumption can be beneficial to sustain exercise intensity during high-intensity exercise events of ~1hr or longer, as well as intense exercise events sustained for longer periods
  • If both fluid replacement and CHO delivery are going to be met with a single beverage, the CHO concentration should NOT excees 8% or even be slighlty less, as highly concentrated CHO beverages reduce gastric emptying (could cause nausea)